The data are obtained on development time at six constant temperatures (12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 22°C) and
thermal requirements for preimaginal development in a ground beetle Amara communis from Arkhangelsk
(64°34'N) and St. Petersburg (59°53'N). The larval and pupal development times were found to be significantly
shorter in the Arkhangelsk than in the St. Petersburg population under all temperatures. As a result, total preimaginal
development appeared to be shorter by 6.2–6.6% in the Arkhangelsk population. The regression lines of the
larval, pupal and total (egg-to-adult) development rate on temperature for the Arkhangelsk population run above
and steeper than the respective lines for the St. Petersburg population. Both populations share the similar values of
the thermal thresholds (7.2–8.2°C). This explains faster preimaginal development in the northern population under
all temperatures above the threshold. Thus, the slope of the regression lines increases, i.e., the sum of degree-days
decreases, whereas the t